I'm a noob to partial-mash brewing, but have been extract brewing for 21 years, so I understand the theory thoroughly but I don't have any experience to fall back on.
Question #1:
I've done 3 partial-mash batches, using a 3-gallon Gott cooler, and achieved complete conversion with the first batch, but not the last two. I'm mashing from 3-6 lbs of fully modified pale or lightly kilned (Munich, Cara-pils) malt with 1.375 qts of water per pound of grist with a single-infusion at 152 deg F. On my last batch, for a maibock, I tested for saccharification with iodine after 30 minutes, 45 minutes, and 60 minutes. At 45 minutes, the temperature had dropped to 148, so I added .8 qts of boiling water to bring it back to 152.
Even after 60 minutes, the iodine still turned blue/black, although it was orange-ish around the edges. Any ideas about what I'm doing wrong and should be doing instead? Thinner mash? Higher mash temp? Since I was going to be using 8# of LME in the brewpot, I just went ahead and sparged.
I guess I should mention that I'm using a grain bag and batch sparging in the cooler. I can see where that might affect my extract efficiency, but not the actual conversion process, right? I'm very careful to poor my mash-in water into the bag and thorough stir my grist, so I'm confident I don't have pockets of dry grain that might be leaching starch into the liquor.
Which brings finally me to Question 2:
If anybody has any thoughts or experiences with batch sparging a partial mash to share, I'd like to hear them. The simplicity of not messing with a false bottom and stuck mashes and a hot liquor tank and sparge arms and sparging rates, the economy of not converting the cooler, the ease of clean-up with the grain bag, the advantages seem to go on and on. What's the downside? I can compensate for lower extract efficiency with a couple of dollars' worth of extra malt.
Sorry for the long-winded questions. Thanks in advance for any help anyone can offer.
Question #1:
I've done 3 partial-mash batches, using a 3-gallon Gott cooler, and achieved complete conversion with the first batch, but not the last two. I'm mashing from 3-6 lbs of fully modified pale or lightly kilned (Munich, Cara-pils) malt with 1.375 qts of water per pound of grist with a single-infusion at 152 deg F. On my last batch, for a maibock, I tested for saccharification with iodine after 30 minutes, 45 minutes, and 60 minutes. At 45 minutes, the temperature had dropped to 148, so I added .8 qts of boiling water to bring it back to 152.
Even after 60 minutes, the iodine still turned blue/black, although it was orange-ish around the edges. Any ideas about what I'm doing wrong and should be doing instead? Thinner mash? Higher mash temp? Since I was going to be using 8# of LME in the brewpot, I just went ahead and sparged.
I guess I should mention that I'm using a grain bag and batch sparging in the cooler. I can see where that might affect my extract efficiency, but not the actual conversion process, right? I'm very careful to poor my mash-in water into the bag and thorough stir my grist, so I'm confident I don't have pockets of dry grain that might be leaching starch into the liquor.
Which brings finally me to Question 2:
If anybody has any thoughts or experiences with batch sparging a partial mash to share, I'd like to hear them. The simplicity of not messing with a false bottom and stuck mashes and a hot liquor tank and sparge arms and sparging rates, the economy of not converting the cooler, the ease of clean-up with the grain bag, the advantages seem to go on and on. What's the downside? I can compensate for lower extract efficiency with a couple of dollars' worth of extra malt.
Sorry for the long-winded questions. Thanks in advance for any help anyone can offer.